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8 votes
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Where are all the teachers? Breaking down America's teacher shortage crisis in five charts.
34 votes -
Idaho needs doctors: But many don't want to come
34 votes -
‘There is no help’: US nurses’ suicide rate rising amid staff shortage and stress
36 votes -
American teachers are missing more school, and there are too few substitutes
46 votes -
Nurses in Denmark shift to cosmetic care despite hospital staffing crisis – DSR believes shift is due to salary and working conditions
23 votes -
Over-capacity ERs are dangerous choke points. But hospital challenges go far deeper.
11 votes -
Is understaffing a new norm?
I'm asking this as a genuine question, not as a hot take. Where I'm coming from: My husband and I went to dinner the other night -- apologies from the waitress on being shortstaffed. A sign on a...
I'm asking this as a genuine question, not as a hot take.
Where I'm coming from:
My husband and I went to dinner the other night -- apologies from the waitress on being shortstaffed. A sign on a local store asks for patience with the lack of staff. The people staffing order pickup at a nearby department store aren't enough to keep up with orders. At my most recent doctor's appointment I spent almost 45 minutes in the exam room waiting to be seen (for an appointment I had to make over a year ago). A few hours after the appointment I went to pick up a prescription, and it hadn't even begun to be processed yet. There was only one cashier working, and she was having to jump between the in-person line and the drive-thru lane. At my job we don't have enough substitute teachers, so we're dependent on regular teachers covering classes during their "prep" periods.
This is merely a recent snapshot from my own life that I'm using as a sort of representative sample, but it feels like something that's been building for a while -- like something that was going to be temporary due to COVID but has stuck around and is now just what we're supposed to get used to. I remember that I used to keep thinking that understaffing would eventually go away over time, but it seems like it's just standard practice now?
Is this something specific to my experiences or my local area (I'm in the US, for context)? Are other people seeing the same thing?
Assuming it isn't just me, is there anything out there besides anecdotes that addresses this phenomenon? I don't want to lean solely on gut reactions, but I also can't deny that nearly every business I go to seems visibly short-staffed all of the time.
124 votes -
The housing crisis driving America’s teacher shortage
27 votes -
Headteachers warn UK facing ‘dangerous’ teacher shortage as recruitment crisis deepens
26 votes -
Government refuses to fund UK students at new medical school despite ‘chronic’ doctor shortage
6 votes -
A ‘Most Outstanding Teacher’ from the Philippines tries to help save a struggling school in rural Arizona
11 votes -
California hospitals brace for ‘Striketober’ amid COVID staffing shortages
5 votes -
Behind shipping delays and soaring prices are workers still at mortal risk of COVID-19
8 votes -
2021 United States teacher shortage survey overview
6 votes -
Thousands of NYPD officers out sick amid coronavirus crisis
9 votes -
USPS needs 1,000 workers in the San Francisco Bay Area to keep up with delivery demands
10 votes -
In short-staffed jail, Jeffrey Epstein was left alone for hours, and one of the two guards didn't normally work as a correctional officer
11 votes -
The teacher shortage is real, large and growing, and worse than we thought (part 1)
22 votes -
After years of inaction, Delta teacher shortage reaches ‘crisis’ levels
11 votes -
Global pilot shortage hits Australia, with cancelled regional routes just the beginning
5 votes